Category Archives: stocks

New ETF Offers Investors A High-Yield Haven

By Alan Gula In early 1998, Russia was hemorrhaging foreign exchange reserves. A number of factors were feeding into worries about Russia’s debt sustainability, including the Asian financial crisis in 1997, a decline in the price of crude oil, political instability, and widening fiscal deficits. Emergency loans from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank did little to stem the tide. On August 17, 1998, Russia devalued its currency (the ruble) and chose to default on its debt. The Russian crisis serves as a warning: Even government bonds can be very risky. Is the Risk Worth the Reward? Today, Russia’s five-year government bonds yield around 9%. In fact, Russia’s sovereign bonds are among the highest yielding of any country, as you can see in the following table: In a world seemingly starved for yield, these rates are all rather high. Indeed, very few investors like the sovereign debt in the table above, because the perceived risks are significant. Several countries’ economies on this list have suffered damage from the plunge in commodity prices, and many are in the throes of political turmoil or nasty recessions. There’s a lot to be worried about. Hence, these bonds are unpopular. But if popular investments should usually be avoided, then could these unloved bonds actually be attractive investments? High-Yield Sovereigns Typically, “high-yield” refers to sub-investment grade corporate bonds, or junk bonds. In ” Finding Yield in a 2% World ,” Mebane Faber, Chief Investment Officer at Cambria Investment Management, back-tested a high-yield government bond strategy. The universe comprised 30 countries from the Global Financial Data database and is sorted based on nominal yield. The top one-third of the bonds are bought, with periodic reconstitution. The results were fairly surprising. From 1950 to 2012, the high-yield strategy actually outperformed an equal weighting of all countries in the universe by around 2% per annum. The outperformance was also consistent across decades, including both rising and falling interest rate environments. The returns were U.S. dollar-based, but over the very long term, local real returns should be similar. The high-yield bond portfolio also seems to have outstanding diversification benefits. The table below compares the performance metrics for a traditional 60/40 portfolio with those of portfolios having 20% and 40% allocations to sovereign high-yield bonds. As the allocation to high-yield government bonds increases, returns rise, volatility decreases, and maximum drawdowns (peak-to-trough declines) are reduced. The more favorable risk/reward relationship is also shown by the rising Sharpe Ratio. Miraculously, adding unpopular, high-yielding sovereign bonds to a traditional portfolio can actually reduce risk, while increasing returns. Now, for most retail investors, buying sovereign bonds issued by Indonesia would prove challenging, to say the least. But there’s now a viable option… ETF to the Rescue Luckily, Faber’s firm launched the Cambria Sovereign High Yield Bond ETF (NYSEARCA: SOVB ) earlier this year. SOVB is one of the many new exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that gives investors convenient and cheap access to promising strategies. The ETF systematically buys the highest-yielding sovereign and quasi-sovereign bonds with sufficient liquidity. SOVB’s annual expenses are 0.59%, which is reasonable for an ETF that has exposure to smaller bond markets. For example, the WisdomTree Emerging Market Local Debt ETF (NYSEARCA: ELD ) has an expense ratio of 0.55%. Clearly, the data show that high-yielding government bonds are attractive long-term investments. Far more often than not, the worst-case scenario – such as a default or currency crisis – doesn’t materialize. Thus, investors wind up more than fairly compensated for risk exposures via the higher yields. And now that there’s a high-yield government bond ETF, I don’t want to hear any more complaints about the dearth of yield in this environment. Original Post

The 5 Big-Cap Internet Stocks With The Strongest Fundamentals

The companies with the best fundamentals among large-cap Internet stocks are Facebook ( FB ), Amazon.com ( AMZN ), Netflix ( NFLX ), Alphabet ( GOOGL ) and Priceline ( PCLN ), says RBC Capital Markets. Internet trends for these top five in their respective sectors — online advertising, retail and travel — remain very consistent, with strong revenue growth year over year, RBC said in a research report. Online advertising seems to be flowing en mass to Google-owner Alphabet and Facebook, with the two now accounting for close to 55% of global online advertising revenue, up from 50% three years ago, says the report from RBC analyst Mark Mahaney. And Amazon continues to show dramatically greater-than-average growth in the online retail sector. “We believe online retail demand trends have remained solid, particularly highlighted by Amazon’s retail sales acceleration,” Mahaney wrote. But, he said, “there’s little ad oxygen for the likes of Yahoo ( YHOO ).” Online travel remains a duopoly of Priceline and Expedia ( EXPE ), while it’s increasingly hard to see anyone catching up to Netflix in terms of video-streaming subscribers, he wrote. Netflix Though shares of Netflix have continued to decline following Q1’s weak international subscriber guidance and domestic price change worries, “We view the fundamental global subscriber growth story as intact,” Mahaney said. Mahaney has a price target on Netflix of 140. Netflix rose 1.4% to 89.12 in the stock market today . The stock is down 20% since reporting first-quarter earnings on April 18, and it’s on the IBD Swing Trader list as a potential short-sale opportunity. Priceline He has a price target on Priceline of 1,600, as growth and profitability trends remain intact. Priceline stock rose 0.4% to 1283.47 on Monday. Priceline is down 6% since reporting Q1 earnings on May 4. Alphabet On Alphabet, Mahaney’s price target is 1,000, as it remains one of the best portfolio plays on the biggest Internet trends. Alphabet stock climbed 0.75% to 730.30 Monday. The stock is down 7% since reporting Q1 earnings on April 21. Facebook On Facebook, the price target is 165, with Mahaney saying the social media company is firing on all cylinders. Facebook stock fell about 1% to 118.67, but it’s up 8% since reporting Q1 earnings on April 27. Facebook is holding above a buy point at 117.09. Amazon The price target on Amazon is 800. Amazon stock edged up 0.1% to 710.68. Still, it’s up 16% since reporting Q1 earnings on April 28. It also is on Swing Trader, but as a long possibility.